Education, Learning, Leadership, Management - CMALT / FHEA / MLPI - Author of #EdTechBook and #EdTechRations ...
Originally written as a conference proposal for ALTC 2025, this post reflects on a university-wide shift in digital learning ...
We celebrate launches. The new course goes live, the announcement goes out, and everyone moves on to the next course or project. It feels like a finish line, the satisfying moment when hard work ...
Every body of work reaches that familiar moment: the big announcement, the new platform/course/system is live, the training sessions are done, the project enters business-as-usual status and ...
Today I attended Day 2 of World of Learning, 2025, exploring how technology, design, and human connection continue to shape how we learn, whether in workplaces or universities. A key takeaway from ...
I don’t always have time for reflection or writing reflective pieces, but every now and then a post from my blogging past pokes it’s head above the parapet and drags me back in. That happened last ...
Let’s make a bold statement and an even bolder assumption: your university (like many others) has already decided it will follow the crowd and develop it’s understanding, polices, and implementation ...
My last post explored how learning is inherently prickly, filled with challenges and discomforts that drive personal and professional growth. How can we use those experiences to transform the ...
No matter how much you plan you should always expect the unexpected. No matter how well you think you’ve planned, life has a way of throwing curveballs. I’ve seen this time and again in my work – ...
Twelve years ago I shared a post reflecting on a striking comment from a student ambassador: universities needed to think creatively about teaching and learning “The need to know the capital of ...
Learning is seen as a path to personal and professional growth and enlightenment, a journey toward acquiring knowledge and skills that can transform our lives. This journey is rarely smooth or ...
As the year closes, I often take time to think about the events of the year. Sometimes these reflections can be very personal. Other times, like this post, they focus on my observations of UK higher ...